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Thought For The Week
J o u r n a lis m is the last resort of th e lo la lly
jncompe+e nt. LUMBERJACK V O L U M E 45 W E D N E S D A Y , D EC EM BER 12, 19-56 N U M B E R 12
r rr - - A R IZ O N A S T A T E C O LLE G E , F LA G S T A F F , A R IZ O N A
Lit'l Jack Says
Either write things worth reading or do
things worth the writing.
Symphony And
Violinist Plan
Joint Concert
Saturday at 8 p. m. the- Northern
Arizona Symphony will present a
joint concert with Mis-s. Camilla
Wicks, world-famous violinist.
The concert is presented in col­laboration
with the Community
Concert Artist Series and wilt fea­ture
the joint performance of
the orchestra and Miss Wicks of
Movements I, [V and V from
Eduard Lalo’s "Sympbonie Fspag-nole'".
These three movements are.
according to A. Harold Goodman,
orchestra director, the most fam­ous
and the most popular move-i
ments of the symphony.
I In addition to tins number, the
i concert will feature the orchestra
playing "Jubilee” -from C. W. Chad­wick's
'‘Symphonic Sketches'' Miss
Wicks will also play several solo
numbers.
Miss Wicks and the orchestra
will rehearse for the concert Fri­day
evening and Saturday morn­ing.
Only holders o f Community Con­cert
tickets will be admitted to the
concert. *
I T A TREE— Shown decorating the giant Christ­mas
tree in the union lobby are students at the
tree-deoorating party Monday night. The party
w: »s sponsored by Associated Students who served
pop com and hot chocolate, Left to right nre Toni
Richardson, Stephen Powers and Diane Grace.
The women's quadrangle will be
open tonight from 7: 30 to 1: 30 to
all students and faculty.
A ll halls have been decorated
for the Christmas season, and
prizes will be given to the most
attractive halls.
In the receiving line will be Dr.
and Mrs. L. A. Eastburn; Shirley
Turner, dorm council president;
Dean Margaret Pipes: Mrs. Ruby-
White; Mrs. Katherine Attebery
and Banche Van Ausdall. vice pres­ident
of dorm counci.
Members of the social commit­tee
are in charge of the event
They include Blanche Van Aus
dall, Mary Lou Yanez. Dani Guil
let, Marian Patterson and Terryl
Are nd sec.
Serving punch will be C. J. Min­arik.
Marge Rein hold. Carol Ras­mussen
and Jeannette Donovan.
In charge of the tours and Spurs.
Cardinal Key. dorm council. M a
jorittes, Pom Pom girls, and
cheerleaders.
The schedule for the different
men’s dorms to make their visits
is Hanley Kail and Cottage City
7: 30 to 8: 30; Taylor Hall 8: 30 to
9: 30; Bury Hall 9 30 to 10: 30; and
the town men at any time from
7. 30 to 10: 30.
Ken Cogdill has "been elected
delegate to represent Blue K ey at
the biennial convention in New
Orleans. La.. Dec. 28. 29 and 30.
John Cook was elected alternate.
Each delegate to the convention
is given the opportunity to join the
national chapter of Blue Key.
The local chapter of Blue Key is
introducing a petition at the con­vention
to have the election date
In the constitution changed.
The local chapter is also enter­ing'
a corrtest within "the national
fraternity which judges the service
contributions of the local chapters
to their schools.
The Blue Key chapter on cam­pus
has received permission from
Jiggs Insley to reorganize the Knot
Hole Club. This club is for the pur­pose
of permitting deserving child­ren
in local grammar schools to
attend college basketball games
free of charge.
State-wide representation of the
alumni is being urged for a con­stitution-
framing meeting to be
held in Phoenix Saturday morn­ing.
Dec. 15. at 10 o’clock in the
Rose Lane school library. 12th
Street and East Rose Lane.
Dr. Lewis J. McDondald will
preside as temporary chairman of
the alumni group. He was selected
to officiate at an alumni meeting
during Homecoming Day, Oct. 13.
Dr. Lacey A. Eastburn, presi­dent
of the college, will be present
to greet the alumni.
Of the Flagstaff alumni group
attending the constitution meeting
will be Marion Gordon, president
of the downtown Flagstaff alumni
chapter, and Miss Mary Bradley .
Dean Joseph C. Rolle, and Mel­vin
Hutchinson, all of the campus
alumni chapter.
Suijoooi jejau aST out SutAvojioj;
at 10 O’clock, the alumni will break
up into small work groups, each
group working on an assigned por­tion
of the constitution.
rt is the desire of the alumni
who attended th. e Homecoming
Day business meeting last fall
that a constitution be drafted to
permit state-wide nomination and
election procedures by mail. Pre­viously
the elections were conduct­ed
at meetings which could not
draw state-wide representation, it
was said.
During the past year, the cam­pus
alumni chapter, headed by Dr.
Byrd Burton, has been active in
promoting a reorganization pro­gram.
Several northern alumni
chapters have been organized as
a result. Activity has become evi­dent
in communities all over the
state, according to Dr. Lewis J.
McDonald, field director for the
college, who has had opportunity
during the past several weeks to
visit almost every community in
the state.
Man of the month is senior, Dick
Way. Dick has attened ASC for
three and a half years and will
complete four years on the Lum­berjack
campus upon graduation
in May.
Dick’s fine school spirit has led
him to the offices of AMS presi­dent
and representative, vice pres­ident
of Deta Sigma Phi. and jun­ior
class president. He is a mem­ber
of the Chain Gang and was
named to Who’s Who in American
Colleges and Universities this year,
yea r.
Dick’s major is elementray ed-caition.
He is mi noring in physi-ueation.
He is mi not ing in physi­cal
education. His future plans in­clude
teaching in California.
Fraternity Hangs
Memorial Plaque
Deaver Guest Speaker
A t Education Meeting
Members o f Kappa Delta Pi, na­tional
honorary society in educa­tion.
held a dinner meeting in the
college banquet room Thursday,
Dec. 6, at 5: 30 p. m,
Chester F. Deaver, associate
professor of science, showed slides
and spoke on pinyon pines and in­teresting
places In Navajo land.
Present at the dinner wer f1
Robert Hammond. Dean Margaret
Pipes, Dr. C. K . Davis. Dr. and
Mrs. William Tinsley. Miss May
| Duncan, and he! - mother Mrs.
; Mary Duncan; Mrs. Maxine Gib­:
*on, Mrs. J. Lawrence Walkup,
| Margaret Reinhold, Mrs. Sonia
Gaddis, Corinne Moore, Elaine
j Crowder, June Elder, and Geral
dine Gil l iland.
Dr. H. K. Paetzold of the Max-
Planck Institute for Physics of the
Stratosphere. Weissenau, Ger­many.
was in Flagstaff Friday to
Sunday, visiting Dr. Arthur Adel
and the Atmospheric Research
Observatory at the college.
The German scientist is in
charge of a program of research
dealing with problems reiated to
those being dealt with by Dr. Adel
at ARO. The two have been cor­responding
for some time. Dr.
Adel said, and Dr. P aetzold is now
preparing to set up an experiment
whieh Dr. Adel pioneered in the
college's ARO, having to do with
the studying of conditions in the
stratosphere.
Both attended the international
ozone conference held Nov. 2S-30
in Sheraton Hotel, Chicago, and
sponsored by the Armour Institute
of Technology. Scientists from
all over the world attended the
conference which dealt primarily
with problems o f atmospheric o­zone.
From Flagstaff Dr. Paetzold
went to Los Angeles to sit in on
official discussions pertaining to
smog control, since ozone is one
of the principal offenders in smog.
At the Chicago conference. Dr.
Adel presented a paper, prepared
jointly with Lt. Edward Epstein of
the U. S. Air Force, which was on
‘The Role Played by Ozone in the
Heating and Cooling of the Stra­tosphere
Dr. Adel, on his recent trip east,
went first to the University of
Michigan for a conference per­taining
to the observatory. From
there he went to Perkins-Elmer
Corporation at Norwalk, Conn..
regarding instruments for the ob­servatory.
Returning from N or­walk,
he stopped a* Chicago for
the ozone conference.
Fifty-six music students from
three colleges of the state attend­ed
the three-day convention ol
Kappa Kappa Psi and Tau Beta
Sigma band fraternities and sor­orities,
held Dec. 7. 8 and 9 on the
campus. This is the first state
convention held by the organiza­tions.
Dr. Lillian Biester, Professor Of
Commerce, Is Author Of A Book
Freshmen G iven
Tea Last Sund ay
A tea was held for alt freshmen
women Sunday afternoon, Dec. 8,
in Morton Hall lobby. The tea was
ponsored by Sigma Epsilon Sig­ma,
national scholastic honorary
for women.
The tea was held to acquaint
Five women were formally in­itiated
into Cardinal Key, national
honor sorority for upperclass wo­men,
Sunday, Dec. 2, at 2 p. m. at
the Home Management House,
itiated were Margaret R Inein
hold, June Elder. Corrinne Moore.
Chris Cowley, and Celia Garcia.
Refreshments consisting of fruit
cake and hot cider -were served.
Dottie Coleman was appointed
president of the group, replacing
Jeannette Donovan, who resigned
to get marrie, d Dec. 22. June Elder
replaces Dottie as vice president,
other officers of the organization
are Yvonne Mills, treasurer: Mar­garet
Greer, historian: and Gerrie
Gilliland, secretary.
M em bers. present at the initia­tion
were Mary Louise Shumway
and Jewell Ellsworth. Faculty
sponsoi-s are Dr Byrd Burton and
Miss Junia McAllister.
The Yule log will be carried in
by twelve outstanding senior wo­men.
They are Jeannette Donovan,
Corinne Moore, Ruth Handorf,
Dottie Coleman, Gerrie Gilliland,
M ary Louise Shumway, Joyce
Longfellow, Margaret Greer. Jane
Bryan, and Yvonne Mills.
Members of the Faculty Wives
Club will hold tbeir annual Christ­mas
party at the home of Presi­dent
and Mrs. L. A. Eastburn, to­night,
Dec. 12. Mrs. Eastburn is
hostess for the event.
The committee assisting Mrs.
Eastburn include Mrs. J Law­rence
Walkup, chairman; Mrs. Joe
seph Rolle, Mrs. Max Basemann,
Mrs. Hartwig O. Bjerg: Mrs. John
Babbitt. and Mrs. Eldon A.
Ardrey.
Members of the club will be
given the opportunity of attending
the Christmas open house in the
women's quadrangle, where they
will tour the different halls, at
7: 30 p. m. They meet at thh East­burn
home at 8: 30 for the Christ­mas
party.
The women will exchange gifts
and sing Christmas carols, lead
by Mrs. Charles W. Meister. Dec­orations
will be carried out in the
Christmas spirit.
Fraternity Is Guest
At Formal In Tempe
Members of Tau Kappa Epsilon
fraternity will be guests at ASC
at Tempe SaSturday night. Dec.
15. for the Tempe TKE Christ­mas
formal at the VFW Lodge.
Plans are being made for a snow
party to be held in the middle of
February. A wmler formal will be
held in January.
FT A Plans Panel
T om orrow N ig h t
The Future Teachers of Amer­ica
will meet tomorrow night.
Dec. 13, in Science 101 from
seven to eight.
Forrest Martin, past president
of FTA. will conduct a panel con­sisting
of first year teachers. The
panel hopes to present problems
and joys they have discovered in
one year of leaching. Betty Bart­lett,
also a past president, will be
present. .
Refreshments w ill be served
after the meeting, and there will
be a short “get together". Every­one
is cordially invited to attend.
girls with the organization and to
acquaint the oragmiation with the
girls.
In charge of refreshments were
Rosie Rightmer and Margaret
Fitzgerald. Janie Monroe and Ann
Parker were in charge of invita­tions.
Sigma Epsilon Sigma had a
meeting Thursday evening, Dec. 6.
at Helen Mazurick s nome. A
Christmas reading o f the one act
play. "Dust of the Road", was
done by Kim King, Donna Roth
and Ann Parker. Refreshments
were served.
Commerce Club Selling
Radio Raffle Tickets
UK. 1H. 1JAX B E S T I R
Tryouts for "Cradle Song", to
be given by the Playmakers
March 14 and 15, will be held Feb-
4 and 5. Six copies of the play are
now on reserve in the library for
any students interested in prepar­ing
for the tryouts.
Tryouts for ‘•Othello", to be
given May 9 and 10. will be held
at the same time. Thus is in order
to avoid duplications in awarding
leading roles.
The Playmakers plan to give an
opera, Mozart's "Ci»i Jan Tutte”,
Feb. 1 and 2.
Commerce Club is selling raffle
tickets on a Meetinghouse clock
radio to be given away Monday.
Dec. 14, club president Donna
Kahm announced.
The proceeds go to the eCom-merce
Club’s scholarship which is
awarded every year to the out­standing
all-around commerce stu­dent-
Ken Cogdill is this year’s
winner.
This is just one of the many pro­jects
the club has in mind in order
to raise funds for this scholarship
and the other activities of the club.
Officers are Donna Kahm. pres­ident:
Mike King, vice-president:
Donna Peters, secretary-treasurer
Silver Barreras, program chair­man:
and Verna Peeler, pub­licity
chairman.
STATE COMMITTEE of the college hand students, selected Satur­day
at the Kappa Kappa. Psi - Tau Beta Sigma convention her** is
shown with President and Mrs. Lacey A. Eastburn when the hand
people concluded their conference with a banquet Saturday evening.
I^ ft to right- are Ed Ric hardson and Rosalie Rubles, the University
o f Arizona; Arvin Randall; Dorothy Jensen; Mrs.. Eastburn and
President Eastburn; Charles McCoy, chairman; and Roberta Vest
and Robert Connolly.
Ken Cogdill Named
Blue Key Delegate
Amid the hum drum of the ASC
commerce department we find the
charming personality of Dr. Lil­lian
Bie ster, professor of com­merce.
Dr Biester received her bache­lors
degree from North Central
College in Neperville, Hi. her
masters from the University of
Wisconsin, and her PhD from the
University of Minnesota.
Before joining the Lumberjack
1 acuity sn 1949 D r Biester taught
in Virginia, Minnesota, and Illi­nois.
Dr. Biester heW the office of
State Superrsor o f Buseniss Ed­ucation
in Minnesota. While she
held this position she was chair­man
of a committee of high school
and college teachers and school
superintendents that wrote a cur­riculum
guide for business educa­tion
which was published in 1360
She developed, along with two
Physicians in Minnesota, for the
State De-Dartmertt of Health a pro­gram
of sex education i or public
schools in Minnesota In collabo­ration
with the two physicians, she
M « e a book tor teacher* U §e*
education which was selected by
the N EA as one of the fifty best
educational hooks of the year.
Dr. Biester has traveled in the
United States and Canada. She
likes to cook and spends much of
her time viewing television and
listening to the radio.
Way is Man
Of The Month
A plaque was recently received
and has been hung in the Women's
Gym in memory of Pat Lorona
who was killed in an automobile
accident April 21, 1*56.
Money for the plaque was con­tributed
by Delta Psi Kappa, na­tional
women’s physical education
fraternity, and the Women's Re­creation
Association.
Pat was a physical education
major and was president of Delta
Psi Kappa. She wras awarded post­humously
last year the fraternity’s
award to the outstanding senior
woman majoring in physical edu­cation.
Home Economics Girls
To Have Holiday Party
Introduction to flTome Eco­nomics
class will be entertained
during their regular class hour,
8: 35 a. m. Thursday. Dec. 20, in the
Home Management House at a
coffee hour. Dr. Byrd Burton,
head of the home economies de­partment
and the class instructor,
will be hostess.
Dr. H. K. Paetzold
Visits On Campus
Home Economics Girls
To Decorate Hospital
Members of Omicron Kappa
Gamma home economics honor­ary.
plan to decorate the Flagstaff
Community HospisaL for the Christ­mas
season tomorrow night at six.
The group is also helping Flag­staff
Fire Department collect and
repair toys for needy children for
Christmas.
Annual Holiday
Parly Tonight
Band Groups Hold
Convention Here
Problems relating to the frater­nity
organizations and the march­ing
and concert bands were dis­cussed
during the various discus­sion
groups. Also discussed were
the activities of the bands and
fraternity organizations.
Kappa Kappa P h . was chosen
Charles McCoy, president of
chairman of the state committee
which is to make arrange ments
for the Arizona delegation to the
held Aug. 2? to 26 at the Univer­sity
erf Utah, Salt Lake city. Utah.
Members of the committee in-cluse
Ed Richardson, and Rosalie
Robles, University of Arizona; Boh
Connolly, and Roberta Vest, A ri­zona*
State College at Tempe; awl
Arvin Randall. and Dorothy Jen­sen.
ASC Flagstaff
The state convention of the or­ganizations
will be at the Univer­sity
of Arizona at Tucson. Held
with the convention will be an
inter-collegiate band with guesi
conductor. No date was set for thf
convention.
'Cradle Song' Tryouts
February 4 And 5
Alums To Frame
New Constitution
Students Perform
A t M u sic Recital
Delta Phi Alpha music honorary
sponsored a music recital Sunday
afternoon, Dec. 9, in Ashurst Music
Hall.
Those performing were Alice
Brinton, voice solo: Joan Pickett,
piano- Diana Dick, voice: Charley
Ketchum, French horn: Rosalie
Hamm, flute: Wayne Hod gin. clar-inte:
Steve Powers, violin: Jo Ann
Scott, piano: Larry Wittig, voice:
and Denny Frazier, trumpet.
Those serving refreshments
w'ere Margaret Greer, Dottie Cole­man
and Mrs. Ruth Ardrey.
JO HERSINGER, daughter of Mr. and N n . Dani HI
Hersinger, Flagstaff, is being congratulated by L
A. Eastburn lor having received a Kiwanis Scholar­ship.
r>r. Eastburn I* past president of thp Pbnrnix
kivtjnis Hub and is active in the local club. Iu
i* a fnshmaa student m a jo rin g in E n g lish . Ifc r
father gut his B a c h e lo r of Scfrencc in Education
drgn*e here and b now working on his Master
<if Art*. H«* teaches in the sixth grade at Flagstaff
Junior High School,
Five Girls Taken
Into Cardinal Key
Christm as Party
For C lu b Tonight
Madrigals Set
Busy Schedule
With a performance at Winslow
High School on Monday behind
them, the madrigal singers will
journey to Phoenix this Friday to
sing for three Valley high schools.
Glendale, Peoria and Washing­ton
high schools will bear the Mad­rigals
perform, according to Mil­lard
Kinney, director. The Mad­rigals,
which will sing at Washingt
on High School at 9: SO a. m., at
Peoria High School at 11 a. m., and
at Glendale High School at 1: 30
p. m., will begin their program with
a group of traditional Christmas
compositions.
Next on the agenda will be Joe
Ann Scott playing two piano solos,
*’La Cathediale’. by Debussey,
and Gushivins "Prelude Num­ber
One". The choir will continue
with some typical madrigal style
music. ranging from sixteenth to
nineteenth century numbers.
Kay Cooper will sing a group ol
South American folk tunes, ac­companying
herself on the guitar.
The singers will conclude the pro
gram with some jazz numbers.
The singers will also perform
this Saturday for the Flagstaff
Business and Professional Wo­men’s
Club at the Hotel Monte
Vista, and on Sunday they wil;
sing at ihe Yule Log Service in thf
union at 5: SO.
The 14 members of the madri­gal
singers are as follows: Keith
Crawley, Pete Hamilton, Bob Mer-
| rill, E5ob Palm. Ronnie Richardson
[Larry Wittig. Cal Justice. Diana
; Dick, Sharon Doughty, Jewel Ell
; sworthl, Huerta Harvey. Laura Me
I Mahan, and Evelyn Richards.
Yule Log Service
Planned Sunday
The annual Yule Log Service
will take place in the lobby'of the
College Union Building Sunday,
Dec. 16, at 5: 30 p. m. The event is
sponsored each year by the As­sociated
Women Students.
Joyce Longfellow will provide
organ music, and the Madrigal
Singers of the Shrine of the Ages
Choir will sing two selections, "A ll
Were There” and " A Babe is
Born/’ Carol Rasmussen wilt be
featured soloist.
Louise Murphy will give the in-voca-
tion, and Pat Hill and Mar
ilyn Morris will give, readings.
Christmas carols will then be
sung, lead by Yvonne Mills. Bene­diction
will be given hy Helen Ma­zurick.

Thought For The Week
J o u r n a lis m is the last resort of th e lo la lly
jncompe+e nt. LUMBERJACK V O L U M E 45 W E D N E S D A Y , D EC EM BER 12, 19-56 N U M B E R 12
r rr - - A R IZ O N A S T A T E C O LLE G E , F LA G S T A F F , A R IZ O N A
Lit'l Jack Says
Either write things worth reading or do
things worth the writing.
Symphony And
Violinist Plan
Joint Concert
Saturday at 8 p. m. the- Northern
Arizona Symphony will present a
joint concert with Mis-s. Camilla
Wicks, world-famous violinist.
The concert is presented in col­laboration
with the Community
Concert Artist Series and wilt fea­ture
the joint performance of
the orchestra and Miss Wicks of
Movements I, [V and V from
Eduard Lalo’s "Sympbonie Fspag-nole'".
These three movements are.
according to A. Harold Goodman,
orchestra director, the most fam­ous
and the most popular move-i
ments of the symphony.
I In addition to tins number, the
i concert will feature the orchestra
playing "Jubilee” -from C. W. Chad­wick's
'‘Symphonic Sketches'' Miss
Wicks will also play several solo
numbers.
Miss Wicks and the orchestra
will rehearse for the concert Fri­day
evening and Saturday morn­ing.
Only holders o f Community Con­cert
tickets will be admitted to the
concert. *
I T A TREE— Shown decorating the giant Christ­mas
tree in the union lobby are students at the
tree-deoorating party Monday night. The party
w: »s sponsored by Associated Students who served
pop com and hot chocolate, Left to right nre Toni
Richardson, Stephen Powers and Diane Grace.
The women's quadrangle will be
open tonight from 7: 30 to 1: 30 to
all students and faculty.
A ll halls have been decorated
for the Christmas season, and
prizes will be given to the most
attractive halls.
In the receiving line will be Dr.
and Mrs. L. A. Eastburn; Shirley
Turner, dorm council president;
Dean Margaret Pipes: Mrs. Ruby-
White; Mrs. Katherine Attebery
and Banche Van Ausdall. vice pres­ident
of dorm counci.
Members of the social commit­tee
are in charge of the event
They include Blanche Van Aus
dall, Mary Lou Yanez. Dani Guil
let, Marian Patterson and Terryl
Are nd sec.
Serving punch will be C. J. Min­arik.
Marge Rein hold. Carol Ras­mussen
and Jeannette Donovan.
In charge of the tours and Spurs.
Cardinal Key. dorm council. M a
jorittes, Pom Pom girls, and
cheerleaders.
The schedule for the different
men’s dorms to make their visits
is Hanley Kail and Cottage City
7: 30 to 8: 30; Taylor Hall 8: 30 to
9: 30; Bury Hall 9 30 to 10: 30; and
the town men at any time from
7. 30 to 10: 30.
Ken Cogdill has "been elected
delegate to represent Blue K ey at
the biennial convention in New
Orleans. La.. Dec. 28. 29 and 30.
John Cook was elected alternate.
Each delegate to the convention
is given the opportunity to join the
national chapter of Blue Key.
The local chapter of Blue Key is
introducing a petition at the con­vention
to have the election date
In the constitution changed.
The local chapter is also enter­ing'
a corrtest within "the national
fraternity which judges the service
contributions of the local chapters
to their schools.
The Blue Key chapter on cam­pus
has received permission from
Jiggs Insley to reorganize the Knot
Hole Club. This club is for the pur­pose
of permitting deserving child­ren
in local grammar schools to
attend college basketball games
free of charge.
State-wide representation of the
alumni is being urged for a con­stitution-
framing meeting to be
held in Phoenix Saturday morn­ing.
Dec. 15. at 10 o’clock in the
Rose Lane school library. 12th
Street and East Rose Lane.
Dr. Lewis J. McDondald will
preside as temporary chairman of
the alumni group. He was selected
to officiate at an alumni meeting
during Homecoming Day, Oct. 13.
Dr. Lacey A. Eastburn, presi­dent
of the college, will be present
to greet the alumni.
Of the Flagstaff alumni group
attending the constitution meeting
will be Marion Gordon, president
of the downtown Flagstaff alumni
chapter, and Miss Mary Bradley .
Dean Joseph C. Rolle, and Mel­vin
Hutchinson, all of the campus
alumni chapter.
Suijoooi jejau aST out SutAvojioj;
at 10 O’clock, the alumni will break
up into small work groups, each
group working on an assigned por­tion
of the constitution.
rt is the desire of the alumni
who attended th. e Homecoming
Day business meeting last fall
that a constitution be drafted to
permit state-wide nomination and
election procedures by mail. Pre­viously
the elections were conduct­ed
at meetings which could not
draw state-wide representation, it
was said.
During the past year, the cam­pus
alumni chapter, headed by Dr.
Byrd Burton, has been active in
promoting a reorganization pro­gram.
Several northern alumni
chapters have been organized as
a result. Activity has become evi­dent
in communities all over the
state, according to Dr. Lewis J.
McDonald, field director for the
college, who has had opportunity
during the past several weeks to
visit almost every community in
the state.
Man of the month is senior, Dick
Way. Dick has attened ASC for
three and a half years and will
complete four years on the Lum­berjack
campus upon graduation
in May.
Dick’s fine school spirit has led
him to the offices of AMS presi­dent
and representative, vice pres­ident
of Deta Sigma Phi. and jun­ior
class president. He is a mem­ber
of the Chain Gang and was
named to Who’s Who in American
Colleges and Universities this year,
yea r.
Dick’s major is elementray ed-caition.
He is mi noring in physi-ueation.
He is mi not ing in physi­cal
education. His future plans in­clude
teaching in California.
Fraternity Hangs
Memorial Plaque
Deaver Guest Speaker
A t Education Meeting
Members o f Kappa Delta Pi, na­tional
honorary society in educa­tion.
held a dinner meeting in the
college banquet room Thursday,
Dec. 6, at 5: 30 p. m,
Chester F. Deaver, associate
professor of science, showed slides
and spoke on pinyon pines and in­teresting
places In Navajo land.
Present at the dinner wer f1
Robert Hammond. Dean Margaret
Pipes, Dr. C. K . Davis. Dr. and
Mrs. William Tinsley. Miss May
| Duncan, and he! - mother Mrs.
; Mary Duncan; Mrs. Maxine Gib­:
*on, Mrs. J. Lawrence Walkup,
| Margaret Reinhold, Mrs. Sonia
Gaddis, Corinne Moore, Elaine
j Crowder, June Elder, and Geral
dine Gil l iland.
Dr. H. K. Paetzold of the Max-
Planck Institute for Physics of the
Stratosphere. Weissenau, Ger­many.
was in Flagstaff Friday to
Sunday, visiting Dr. Arthur Adel
and the Atmospheric Research
Observatory at the college.
The German scientist is in
charge of a program of research
dealing with problems reiated to
those being dealt with by Dr. Adel
at ARO. The two have been cor­responding
for some time. Dr.
Adel said, and Dr. P aetzold is now
preparing to set up an experiment
whieh Dr. Adel pioneered in the
college's ARO, having to do with
the studying of conditions in the
stratosphere.
Both attended the international
ozone conference held Nov. 2S-30
in Sheraton Hotel, Chicago, and
sponsored by the Armour Institute
of Technology. Scientists from
all over the world attended the
conference which dealt primarily
with problems o f atmospheric o­zone.
From Flagstaff Dr. Paetzold
went to Los Angeles to sit in on
official discussions pertaining to
smog control, since ozone is one
of the principal offenders in smog.
At the Chicago conference. Dr.
Adel presented a paper, prepared
jointly with Lt. Edward Epstein of
the U. S. Air Force, which was on
‘The Role Played by Ozone in the
Heating and Cooling of the Stra­tosphere
Dr. Adel, on his recent trip east,
went first to the University of
Michigan for a conference per­taining
to the observatory. From
there he went to Perkins-Elmer
Corporation at Norwalk, Conn..
regarding instruments for the ob­servatory.
Returning from N or­walk,
he stopped a* Chicago for
the ozone conference.
Fifty-six music students from
three colleges of the state attend­ed
the three-day convention ol
Kappa Kappa Psi and Tau Beta
Sigma band fraternities and sor­orities,
held Dec. 7. 8 and 9 on the
campus. This is the first state
convention held by the organiza­tions.
Dr. Lillian Biester, Professor Of
Commerce, Is Author Of A Book
Freshmen G iven
Tea Last Sund ay
A tea was held for alt freshmen
women Sunday afternoon, Dec. 8,
in Morton Hall lobby. The tea was
ponsored by Sigma Epsilon Sig­ma,
national scholastic honorary
for women.
The tea was held to acquaint
Five women were formally in­itiated
into Cardinal Key, national
honor sorority for upperclass wo­men,
Sunday, Dec. 2, at 2 p. m. at
the Home Management House,
itiated were Margaret R Inein
hold, June Elder. Corrinne Moore.
Chris Cowley, and Celia Garcia.
Refreshments consisting of fruit
cake and hot cider -were served.
Dottie Coleman was appointed
president of the group, replacing
Jeannette Donovan, who resigned
to get marrie, d Dec. 22. June Elder
replaces Dottie as vice president,
other officers of the organization
are Yvonne Mills, treasurer: Mar­garet
Greer, historian: and Gerrie
Gilliland, secretary.
M em bers. present at the initia­tion
were Mary Louise Shumway
and Jewell Ellsworth. Faculty
sponsoi-s are Dr Byrd Burton and
Miss Junia McAllister.
The Yule log will be carried in
by twelve outstanding senior wo­men.
They are Jeannette Donovan,
Corinne Moore, Ruth Handorf,
Dottie Coleman, Gerrie Gilliland,
M ary Louise Shumway, Joyce
Longfellow, Margaret Greer. Jane
Bryan, and Yvonne Mills.
Members of the Faculty Wives
Club will hold tbeir annual Christ­mas
party at the home of Presi­dent
and Mrs. L. A. Eastburn, to­night,
Dec. 12. Mrs. Eastburn is
hostess for the event.
The committee assisting Mrs.
Eastburn include Mrs. J Law­rence
Walkup, chairman; Mrs. Joe
seph Rolle, Mrs. Max Basemann,
Mrs. Hartwig O. Bjerg: Mrs. John
Babbitt. and Mrs. Eldon A.
Ardrey.
Members of the club will be
given the opportunity of attending
the Christmas open house in the
women's quadrangle, where they
will tour the different halls, at
7: 30 p. m. They meet at thh East­burn
home at 8: 30 for the Christ­mas
party.
The women will exchange gifts
and sing Christmas carols, lead
by Mrs. Charles W. Meister. Dec­orations
will be carried out in the
Christmas spirit.
Fraternity Is Guest
At Formal In Tempe
Members of Tau Kappa Epsilon
fraternity will be guests at ASC
at Tempe SaSturday night. Dec.
15. for the Tempe TKE Christ­mas
formal at the VFW Lodge.
Plans are being made for a snow
party to be held in the middle of
February. A wmler formal will be
held in January.
FT A Plans Panel
T om orrow N ig h t
The Future Teachers of Amer­ica
will meet tomorrow night.
Dec. 13, in Science 101 from
seven to eight.
Forrest Martin, past president
of FTA. will conduct a panel con­sisting
of first year teachers. The
panel hopes to present problems
and joys they have discovered in
one year of leaching. Betty Bart­lett,
also a past president, will be
present. .
Refreshments w ill be served
after the meeting, and there will
be a short “get together". Every­one
is cordially invited to attend.
girls with the organization and to
acquaint the oragmiation with the
girls.
In charge of refreshments were
Rosie Rightmer and Margaret
Fitzgerald. Janie Monroe and Ann
Parker were in charge of invita­tions.
Sigma Epsilon Sigma had a
meeting Thursday evening, Dec. 6.
at Helen Mazurick s nome. A
Christmas reading o f the one act
play. "Dust of the Road", was
done by Kim King, Donna Roth
and Ann Parker. Refreshments
were served.
Commerce Club Selling
Radio Raffle Tickets
UK. 1H. 1JAX B E S T I R
Tryouts for "Cradle Song", to
be given by the Playmakers
March 14 and 15, will be held Feb-
4 and 5. Six copies of the play are
now on reserve in the library for
any students interested in prepar­ing
for the tryouts.
Tryouts for ‘•Othello", to be
given May 9 and 10. will be held
at the same time. Thus is in order
to avoid duplications in awarding
leading roles.
The Playmakers plan to give an
opera, Mozart's "Ci»i Jan Tutte”,
Feb. 1 and 2.
Commerce Club is selling raffle
tickets on a Meetinghouse clock
radio to be given away Monday.
Dec. 14, club president Donna
Kahm announced.
The proceeds go to the eCom-merce
Club’s scholarship which is
awarded every year to the out­standing
all-around commerce stu­dent-
Ken Cogdill is this year’s
winner.
This is just one of the many pro­jects
the club has in mind in order
to raise funds for this scholarship
and the other activities of the club.
Officers are Donna Kahm. pres­ident:
Mike King, vice-president:
Donna Peters, secretary-treasurer
Silver Barreras, program chair­man:
and Verna Peeler, pub­licity
chairman.
STATE COMMITTEE of the college hand students, selected Satur­day
at the Kappa Kappa. Psi - Tau Beta Sigma convention her** is
shown with President and Mrs. Lacey A. Eastburn when the hand
people concluded their conference with a banquet Saturday evening.
I^ ft to right- are Ed Ric hardson and Rosalie Rubles, the University
o f Arizona; Arvin Randall; Dorothy Jensen; Mrs.. Eastburn and
President Eastburn; Charles McCoy, chairman; and Roberta Vest
and Robert Connolly.
Ken Cogdill Named
Blue Key Delegate
Amid the hum drum of the ASC
commerce department we find the
charming personality of Dr. Lil­lian
Bie ster, professor of com­merce.
Dr Biester received her bache­lors
degree from North Central
College in Neperville, Hi. her
masters from the University of
Wisconsin, and her PhD from the
University of Minnesota.
Before joining the Lumberjack
1 acuity sn 1949 D r Biester taught
in Virginia, Minnesota, and Illi­nois.
Dr. Biester heW the office of
State Superrsor o f Buseniss Ed­ucation
in Minnesota. While she
held this position she was chair­man
of a committee of high school
and college teachers and school
superintendents that wrote a cur­riculum
guide for business educa­tion
which was published in 1360
She developed, along with two
Physicians in Minnesota, for the
State De-Dartmertt of Health a pro­gram
of sex education i or public
schools in Minnesota In collabo­ration
with the two physicians, she
M « e a book tor teacher* U §e*
education which was selected by
the N EA as one of the fifty best
educational hooks of the year.
Dr. Biester has traveled in the
United States and Canada. She
likes to cook and spends much of
her time viewing television and
listening to the radio.
Way is Man
Of The Month
A plaque was recently received
and has been hung in the Women's
Gym in memory of Pat Lorona
who was killed in an automobile
accident April 21, 1*56.
Money for the plaque was con­tributed
by Delta Psi Kappa, na­tional
women’s physical education
fraternity, and the Women's Re­creation
Association.
Pat was a physical education
major and was president of Delta
Psi Kappa. She wras awarded post­humously
last year the fraternity’s
award to the outstanding senior
woman majoring in physical edu­cation.
Home Economics Girls
To Have Holiday Party
Introduction to flTome Eco­nomics
class will be entertained
during their regular class hour,
8: 35 a. m. Thursday. Dec. 20, in the
Home Management House at a
coffee hour. Dr. Byrd Burton,
head of the home economies de­partment
and the class instructor,
will be hostess.
Dr. H. K. Paetzold
Visits On Campus
Home Economics Girls
To Decorate Hospital
Members of Omicron Kappa
Gamma home economics honor­ary.
plan to decorate the Flagstaff
Community HospisaL for the Christ­mas
season tomorrow night at six.
The group is also helping Flag­staff
Fire Department collect and
repair toys for needy children for
Christmas.
Annual Holiday
Parly Tonight
Band Groups Hold
Convention Here
Problems relating to the frater­nity
organizations and the march­ing
and concert bands were dis­cussed
during the various discus­sion
groups. Also discussed were
the activities of the bands and
fraternity organizations.
Kappa Kappa P h . was chosen
Charles McCoy, president of
chairman of the state committee
which is to make arrange ments
for the Arizona delegation to the
held Aug. 2? to 26 at the Univer­sity
erf Utah, Salt Lake city. Utah.
Members of the committee in-cluse
Ed Richardson, and Rosalie
Robles, University of Arizona; Boh
Connolly, and Roberta Vest, A ri­zona*
State College at Tempe; awl
Arvin Randall. and Dorothy Jen­sen.
ASC Flagstaff
The state convention of the or­ganizations
will be at the Univer­sity
of Arizona at Tucson. Held
with the convention will be an
inter-collegiate band with guesi
conductor. No date was set for thf
convention.
'Cradle Song' Tryouts
February 4 And 5
Alums To Frame
New Constitution
Students Perform
A t M u sic Recital
Delta Phi Alpha music honorary
sponsored a music recital Sunday
afternoon, Dec. 9, in Ashurst Music
Hall.
Those performing were Alice
Brinton, voice solo: Joan Pickett,
piano- Diana Dick, voice: Charley
Ketchum, French horn: Rosalie
Hamm, flute: Wayne Hod gin. clar-inte:
Steve Powers, violin: Jo Ann
Scott, piano: Larry Wittig, voice:
and Denny Frazier, trumpet.
Those serving refreshments
w'ere Margaret Greer, Dottie Cole­man
and Mrs. Ruth Ardrey.
JO HERSINGER, daughter of Mr. and N n . Dani HI
Hersinger, Flagstaff, is being congratulated by L
A. Eastburn lor having received a Kiwanis Scholar­ship.
r>r. Eastburn I* past president of thp Pbnrnix
kivtjnis Hub and is active in the local club. Iu
i* a fnshmaa student m a jo rin g in E n g lish . Ifc r
father gut his B a c h e lo r of Scfrencc in Education
drgn*e here and b now working on his Master